Easter 1976

Easter (Easter Sunday) or Pascha is the oldest and most important Christian feast, celebrating
the Resurrection of Jesus Christ on the third day after his crucifixion, as
described in the New Testament. Easter is preceded by Lent, a forty-day period of
fasting and penance that starts on Ash Wednesday.

Moveable Feasts Related to Easter

Dates of many of the most important Christian holidays are related to the date
of Easter. Below you can find a list of most of them in 1976 year.
Please note that some of them are only observed by the Roman Catholic church while
other by most of the Christian churches around the world. Their "popularity"
also varies from country to country.

How is the date of Easter determined?

Easter is a moveable holiday meaning that its date varies from year to
year. In Western churches, like the Roman Catholic Church, which use the
Gregorian calendar, the earliest possible date is March 22, while the
latest is April 25. However, these are very rare — the next time Easter falls
on April 25 is in the year 2038, and the next time the date is March 22 will be in
the year 2285. The most common date between the year 1900 and 2100 is April
19. Eastern churches, including the Eastern Orthodox Church, use the Julian
calendar, therefore the date usually differs from the Gregorian calendar,
even though the dates are computed in a similar way.

The date of Easter is determined as the first Sunday after the Paschal full
moon falling on or next after the spring equinox (March 21 — a fixed date not
the real, astronomical equinox). The Paschal full moon refers to the 14th day
of the ecclesiastical lunar month and not the real, astronomical Full Moon, and
its date is determined from tables. However, most often the two dates coincide,
and between the year 1900 and 2100 there are only 18 differences between the
dates calculated using the two methods. A well-known method of calculating the
date of Easter was given by Carl Friedrich Gauss, however a simpler method was
described by Jean Meeus in [1].

Early Easter Date Calculations

The first Christians followed the biblical Hebrew calendar and
timed the observance of Easter in relation to the date of the Jewish Passover.
Passover was celebrated by the Israelites to commemorate their deliverance from the
slavery in Egypt. The Passover meal was eaten at sunset on the 14th day of
Nisan (Aviv). Jesus was crucified on the 14th and rose from the dead some time
before sunrise on the 16th day of Nisan. Because the Jews got away from the
biblical Hebrew calendar (in 221 AD and further in 400 AD), and because the
Christians wanted the date to be independent of the Jewish calendar,
the First Council of Nicaea (325 AD) established the independent and uniform
calculation of the Easter date.

Easter Celebrations

In many countries, Easter is a public holiday, and as it always falls on
Sunday, some countries also have Easter Monday as a public holiday,
including Australia, Germany and Ireland.

Although, Easter is the most important Christian holiday it is not as popular as
Christmas. It joins two important events of which the first is profoundly
sad and dramatic while the other is just the opposite. The first one is, of
course, the Crucifixion and Death of Christ after which his body was placed in
the tomb. Three days later he Resurrected beating death. Resurrection is a
triumph of life and even more astonishing than the miracle of Christ birth.

In addition to religious celebrations involving Church services, Easter is
celebrated in several ways in the United States, Europe and other parts of the
world. Some of these celebrations have little to do with the Christian meaning
of the holiday. The most popular include family meals, Easter eggs
decoration, hiding the decorated eggs for children to find and giving children
baskets with candy.

In the USA, the Spring break for high school and college students usually
occurs about Easter time, hence many families leave the cold of northern states
to visit amusement parks or sunny beaches in the south.